The writer then adds at the bottom of the piece: "Uni Lad does not condone rape without saying 'surprise'."

On Tuesday the National Union of Students (NUS) called for the website UniLad, which claims to be the "number one university student lad's magazine and guide to getting laid" to be pulled down over the article.

"I only deal with the technical aspect of the website and am not responsible for writing or checking the content that gets published.

"I am however appalled myself that UniLad went this far," the BBC reported.

According to UniLad's Facebook page, Street is described as "CEO & Tech" - although this has now been removed from the page.

Meanwhile, Alex Partridge, who calls himself the "Boss" and "Editor in Chief" of UniLad, apologised for the article, calling it a "shambles".

"The article in question was a shambles and should never have been printed.

"A simple apology is not enough to rectify any distress we have caused, we overstepped the mark, we took things too far.

"Uni Lad will be greatly improving it's editorial policies to make sure nothing like this happens again."

The website writers did include one female - Lorna Naylor - although she wrote articles such as the one pictured above, titled "The Problem With Slags".

She tweeted one writer for PR company esPResso saying: "nothing i have written has been controversial".

Another writer, Jack-William Cantwell, emailed Huffington Post UK claiming he had been "inactive with the company for around five months" after tweeting on 3 January "@UniLadMag can't wait to start writing again after an amazing festive season!"